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Secure tunnels to localhost - open source ngrok alternative

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Tunnel is fast and secure client/server package that enables proxying public connections to your local machine over a tunnel connection from the local machine to the public server. It enables you to share your localhost when you don't have a public IP or you are hidden by a firewall.

It can help you:

  • Demo without deploying
  • Simplify mobile device testing
  • Build webhook integrations with ease
  • Run personal cloud services from your own private network

It is based on HTTP/2 for speed and security. Server accepts TLS connection from known clients, client is recognised by it's TLS certificate id. Server can protect HTTP tunnels with basic authentication.

Installation

Download latest release from here. The release contains two executables:

  • tunneld - the tunnel server, to be run on publicly available host like AWS or GCE
  • tunnel - the tunnel client, to be run on your local machine or in your private network

To get help on the command parameters run tunneld -h or tunnel -h.

Configuration

The tunnel client tunnel requires configuration file, by default it will try reading tunnel.yml in your current working directory. If you want to specify other file use -config flag.

Sample configuration that exposes:

  • localhost:8080 as webui.my-tunnel-host.com
  • host in private network for ssh connections

looks like this

    server_addr: SERVER_IP:4443
    insecure_skip_verify: true
    tunnels:
      webui:
        proto: http
        addr: localhost:8080
        auth: user:password
        host: webui.my-tunnel-host.com
      ssh:
        proto: tcp
        addr: 192.168.0.5:22
        remote_addr: 0.0.0.0:22

Configuration options:

  • server_addr: server TCP address, i.e. 54.12.12.45:4443
  • insecure_skip_verify: controls whether a client verifies the server's certificate chain and host name, if using self signed certificates must be set to true, default: false
  • tls_crt: path to client TLS certificate, default: client.crt in the config file directory
  • tls_key: path to client TLS certificate key, default: client.key in the config file directory
  • tunnels / [name]
    • proto: tunnel protocol, http or tcp
    • addr: forward traffic to this local port number or network address, for proto=http this can be full URL i.e. https://machine/sub/path/?plus=params, supports URL schemes http and https
    • auth: (proto=http) (optional) basic authentication credentials to enforce on tunneled requests, format user:password
    • host: (proto=http) hostname to request (requires reserved name and DNS CNAME)
    • remote_addr: (proto=tcp) bind the remote TCP address
  • backoff
    • interval: how long client would wait before redialing the server if connection was lost, exponential backoff initial interval, default: 500ms
    • multiplier: interval multiplier if reconnect failed, default: 1.5
    • max_interval: maximal time client would wait before redialing the server, default: 1m
    • max_time: maximal time client would try to reconnect to the server if connection was lost, set 0 to never stop trying, default: 15m

Running

Tunnel requires TLS certificates for both client and server.

$ openssl req -x509 -nodes -newkey rsa:2048 -sha256 -keyout client.key -out client.crt
$ openssl req -x509 -nodes -newkey rsa:2048 -sha256 -keyout server.key -out server.crt

Run client:

  • Install tunnel binary
  • Make .tunnel directory in your project directory
  • Copy client.key, client.crt to .tunnel
  • Create configuration file tunnel.yml in .tunnel
  • Start all tunnels
$ tunnel -config ./tunnel/tunnel.yml start-all

Run server:

  • Install tunneld binary
  • Make .tunneld directory
  • Copy server.key, server.crt to .tunneld
  • Get client identifier (tunnel -config ./tunnel/tunnel.yml id), identifier should look like this YMBKT3V-ESUTZ2Z-7MRILIJ-T35FHGO-D2DHO7D-FXMGSSR-V4LBSZX-BNDONQ4
  • Start tunnel server
$ tunneld -tlsCrt .tunneld/server.crt -tlsKey .tunneld/server.key -clients YMBKT3V-ESUTZ2Z-7MRILIJ-T35FHGO-D2DHO7D-FXMGSSR-V4LBSZX-BNDONQ4

This will run HTTP server on port 80 and HTTPS (HTTP/2) server on port 443. If you want to use HTTPS it's recommended to get a properly signed certificate to avoid security warnings.

Using as a library

Install the package:

$ go get -u github.com/mmatczuk/go-http-tunnel

The tunnel package is designed to be simple, extensible, with little dependencies. It is based on HTTP/2 for client server connectivity, this avoids usage of third party tools for multiplexing tunneled connections. HTTP/2 is faster, more stable and much more tested then any other multiplexing technology. You may see benchmark comparing the tunnel package to a koding tunnel.

The tunnel package:

  • custom dialer and listener for Client and Server
  • easy modifications of HTTP proxy (based on ReverseProxy)
  • proxy anything, ProxyFunc architecture
  • structured logs with go-kit compatible minimal logger interface

See:

License

Copyright (C) 2017 Michał Matczuk

This project is distributed under the BSD-3 license. See the LICENSE file for details.

GitHub star is always appreciated!

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